Interaction effects of targeted agri-environmental payments on non-marketed goods and services under climate change in a mountain region
Authored by Huber Robert, Snell Rebecca, Monin Francois, Brunner Sibyl Hanna, Schmatz Dirk, Finger Robert
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2017.04.029
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
LPL
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
http://rossa-prod-ap11.ethz.ch/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE2609069
Abstract
Targeting of agri-environmental measures (AEMs) is a key to increasing
the cost-effectiveness of governmental support for biodiversity
conservation and the provision of ecosystem services from agriculture.
Existing literature, however, often focuses on single measures without
considering that policies are usually bundles of different measures
addressing multiple non-marketed goods and services. Thus, interaction
effects of a set of policies in a given policy mix may influence the
cost-effectiveness of single measures. Recently, Swiss agricultural
policy was redesigned using the Tinbergen rule as its basis, i.e., a
single measure for each policy goal, including additional targeted
direct payments. This facilitates testing for interaction effects of
multiple targeted AEMs. Here we use a social-ecological, agent-based
modelling framework to assess interaction effects of these agricultural
policies while accounting for climate change impacts in our analysis.
The results from our case study in a mountain region show that ecosystem
service provision increases with targeted payments. However, interaction
effects of the different targeted policies affect the provision levels
of all goods and services. In particular, changes at the extensive
margin, i.e., the total amount of land that is under production, largely
determine the amount of ecosystem services provided. Thus, climate
change driven productivity increases and policies that keep land in
production may substantially support the provision of non-marketed goods
and services in marginal agricultural production regions with a high
potential for land abandonment. Consequently, the effectiveness of
targeted policy measures should also consider changes at the extensive
margin and be assessed in the context of bundles or portfolios of
different policy measures.
Tags
Management
Land-use change
Biodiversity
Ecosystem services
Conservation
Model
Biodiversity conservation
Schemes
Trade-offs
Agent-based
modelling
Agri-environmental measures
Targeting
Non-marketed goods and services
Mountain region
Agricultural
landscapes
Compensation payments